Is RE Development Right For Me?

​I've been considering giving up on my Wall Street dreams and pursuing a career in RE development. Better hours, less repetitive job duties, and more entrepreneurial opportunities for people without an 8 figure net worth make the field seem a lot more interesting to me.

I feel I would be really good at zoning and environmental issues, dealing with lawyers, and really any other type of regulatory issues. At my previous PE internship I gained a lot of experience researching pharmaceutical regulations, communicating with government regulatory authorities, etc. and to make a long story short, I probably saved them more money than their in-house attorney that year. That wasn't enough to make me consider a career in healthcare law, but it did convince me that I am a valuable asset in any industry that has a lot of complex regulatory issues.

I also believe I am capable of excelling at market research and really any type of due diligence related activities the job can throw at me. Finance aspects of the job shouldn't be a problem for a finance major with good grades and a couple finance internships. The ability to think outside the box has also been one of my strong points and I could see myself being good at figuring out creative ways to milk more income out of rental properties.

What concerns me about commercial real estate, is that it seems like your ability to network and having a powerful rolodex is way more important than ANYTHING else, even more so than Wall Street. I've always been kind of a socially awkward guy and am definitely not a sales type. I'm not a complete weirdo with no friends kind of awkward, but very far from being able to walk into a room full of brokers and being able to light up the room. Should this be enough to deter me from entering the field, or can excelling at other aspects compensate for me not being a social butterfly?​

 

Commercial real estate brokers are the lowest form of human life. You don't gauge your ability to succeed at real estate development by the lowest common denominator in the industry. They are social butterflies because they have to be to gain clients.

I can't speak to whether or not real estate development is right for you as a career, but there are plenty of people that do well in real estate development who aren't social butterflies. Raising money isn't about the quantity of contacts; it's about quality contacts. Even so, most people (not all, most) will probably spend a decade working as an employee in one form or various forms of real estate prior to going out on his own. If you're going to be a developer you'll probably work for a developer or something similar for a good, long while. Over the years you'll organically make friends and contacts, you'll learn the business, and, hopefully, you'll prove your competence and good judgment to your contacts. Things will develop (pardon the pun) organically.

 
DCDepository:
I can't speak to whether or not real estate development is right for you as a career, but there are plenty of people that do well in real estate development who aren't social butterflies.
I have to chime in because this is one of those things that I feel gets overstated.

Yes, the industry tends to be dominated by type A's and there are some big players who came from a brokerage background, but this whole idea that real estate is nothing but RELATIONSHIPS RELATIONSHIPS RELATIONSHIPS gets a little tired. If you want to be a broker, then yes, this is true, but for god's sake, what business is NOT about relationships? What about i-banking, is that less about relationships than real estate? I've met some very successful developers whose personalities are so robotic that they come off as borderline creepy.

 
DCDepository:

Commercial real estate brokers are the lowest form of human life. You don't gauge your ability to succeed at real estate development by the lowest common denominator in the industry.

I'm sorry, but what the fuck? I can't even begin to describe how this is one of the dumbest things I've ever seen on this site. Nevermind that I can't tell you the number of successful developers I know that got their starts in leasing. Do you need to be a rocket scientist for brokerage? No, of course not, but far from the lowest form of human life. Jesus.

 
DCDepository:

Commercial real estate brokers are the lowest form of human life.

In any major market there are plenty of brokers making 500s by their 30s, and some even make 7 figures before they're 30. The amount of money some brokers make are even more than your typical IB/PE/HF executives.

The reason you see so many mouth breathing brokers is because it's very easy to get into brokerage and a lot of brokers are not competent. The delta between the quality of people among different brokerage shops is huge, larger than any industry you see here.

The nature of the brokerage business requires a top broker to be "social butterflies" as you call it, but because of this, their other qualities like knowledge of the real estate business and knowledge of certain market is often overlooked by people like you.

 
DCDepository:
Commercial real estate brokers are the lowest form of human life. You don't gauge your ability to succeed at real estate development by the lowest common denominator in the industry. They are social butterflies because they have to be to gain clients.

Well that's aggressive. I hated being a broker for a year and I hated maybe 50% of the brokers in my office, but you probably shouldn't gauge an entire industry by the lowest common denominators of that industry either. The people who are actually successful brokers rise to the top for a reason, and that reason is usually not because they're the "lowest form of human life." There are ISIS, the KKK, Elizabeth Warren, Justin Bieber...you're purposefully ignoring a lot.

DCDepository:
I can't speak to whether or not real estate development is right for you as a career, but there are plenty of people that do well in real estate development who aren't social butterflies. Raising money isn't about the quantity of contacts; it's about quality contacts. Even so, most people (not all, most) will probably spend a decade working as an employee in one form or various forms of real estate prior to going out on his own. If you're going to be a developer you'll probably work for a developer or something similar for a good, long while. Over the years you'll organically make friends and contacts, you'll learn the business, and, hopefully, you'll prove your competence and good judgment to your contacts. Things will develop (pardon the pun) organically.

Ah, but this is correct. Very much so.

Commercial Real Estate Developer
 

"I interviewed with them [NGKF] in June of last year for a senior analyst role in their debt/equity placement group in their NW DC office. They had just poached a team of two big originators who were looking to hire their staff. The office space is really nice, the hiring managers (team leads) seemed like nice guys, but there was no "personality fit." There was obviously no mutual interest between the sides--I wasn't down with their personalities and they were not down with mine." -DCDepository

You interviewed at a brokerage shop a few months back. Could you be a bigger hypocrite?

 
cre123:

"I interviewed with them [NGKF] in June of last year for a senior analyst role in their debt/equity placement group in their NW DC office. They had just poached a team of two big originators who were looking to hire their staff. The office space is really nice, the hiring managers (team leads) seemed like nice guys, but there was no "personality fit." There was obviously no mutual interest between the sides--I wasn't down with their personalities and they were not down with mine." -DCDepository

You interviewed at a brokerage shop a few months back. Could you be a bigger hypocrite?

Wow. We're obviously talking about commercial real estate brokers, i.e. the people who need a real estate license to practice. We're not talking about debt/equity placement brokers, yacht brokers, or brothels. We're talking about commercial real estate brokers. As is clearly presented, I interviewed with a group of commercial mortgage and equity brokers.

Could you be any more dense?

 
DCDepository:

Commercial real estate brokers are the lowest form of human life. You don't gauge your ability to succeed at real estate development by the lowest common denominator in the industry. They are social butterflies because they have to be to gain clients.

I would have to agree that there are a lot of shitty brokers. I personally work in brokerage and I see them at my firm and out firms. However, there are brokers are highly intelligent and have the social competence that makes them the best at what they do. Many of these top notch brokers end up in PE or development. This is ideally the route I'll take and I've seen many people do it.

As for the idiots? Well you can hate them all you want. They're making more money that you and they don't care who is smartest–they are in it to make money. Lots of it. Go tell a 28 year old kid who is making $500k-$2M annually selling single tenant deals that he's an idiot. Who cares.

These "idiots" you speak of are the ones digging up deals and and syndicating them. For them it's not about being the smartest person.....it's about being the best at what you do and in turn making a killing.

But like you said everyone is entitled to their opinion. I just think there's more than a few folks here who seem to disagree with yours.

I had a flair for languages. But I soon discovered that what talks best is dollars, dinars, drachmas, rubles, rupees and pounds fucking sterling.
 
makecents:
DCDepository:
Commercial real estate brokers are the lowest form of human life. You don't gauge your ability to succeed at real estate development by the lowest common denominator in the industry. They are social butterflies because they have to be to gain clients.

I would have to agree that there are a lot of shitty brokers. I personally work in brokerage and I see them at my firm and out firms. However, there are brokers are highly intelligent and have the social competence that makes them the best at what they do. Many of these top notch brokers end up in PE or development. This is ideally the route I'll take and I've seen many people do it.

As for the idiots? Well you can hate them all you want. They're making more money that you and they don't care who is smartest–they are in it to make money. Lots of it. Go tell a 28 year old kid who is making $500k-$2M annually selling single tenant deals that he's an idiot. Who cares.

These "idiots" you speak of are the ones digging up deals and and syndicating them. For them it's not about being the smartest person.....it's about being the best at what you do and in turn making a killing.

But like you said everyone is entitled to their opinion. I just think there's more than a few folks here who seem to disagree with yours.

Yeah, there are plenty of people who disagree with me because about 75% of the people who frequent the WSO real estate forum work as commercial real estate brokers. Congrats on commercial real estate brokers not agreeing that they are incompetent morons who produce questionable value-add.

 

it sounds like you may be a better fit for AM than development. In AM you would be doing a lot of the due diligence work to set yearly asset business plans and budgets, make decisions on leasing, capital improvement projects, etc. There is plenty of interaction with lawyers, accountants, property managers, contractors, etc. to figure out regulatory and legal framework for all sorts of situations - from tax avoidance strategies to construction project management. But on the other side, you generally don't need the huge Rolodex because the assets are purchased by another team and handed off to you to manage. If you went institutional, you would never make the super big $, because that usually goes to acquisitions, but you wouldn't be poor and at some places, they let employees buy into the funds.

 
DCDepository:

Commercial real estate brokers are the lowest form of human life. You don't gauge your ability to succeed at real estate development by the lowest common denominator in the industry. They are social butterflies because they have to be to gain clients.

I can't speak to whether or not real estate development is right for you as a career, but there are plenty of people that do well in real estate development who aren't social butterflies. Raising money isn't about the quantity of contacts; it's about quality contacts. Even so, most people (not all, most) will probably spend a decade working as an employee in one form or various forms of real estate prior to going out on his own. If you're going to be a developer you'll probably work for a developer or something similar for a good, long while. Over the years you'll organically make friends and contacts, you'll learn the business, and, hopefully, you'll prove your competence and good judgment to your contacts. Things will develop (pardon the pun) organically.

That's good to hear.

CRE:

Things are getting heated in here.

@Pokemon Master - you really should look into the "type-themed gym" market. If you can navigate the zoning hurdles of say, installing a fire gym inside of an active volcano, I'm sure you'll be able to consult for gym leaders of all regions.

Sounds like a viable game plan!

mrcheese321:

it sounds like you may be a better fit for AM than development. In AM you would be doing a lot of the due diligence work to set yearly asset business plans and budgets, make decisions on leasing, capital improvement projects, etc. There is plenty of interaction with lawyers, accountants, property managers, contractors, etc. to figure out regulatory and legal framework for all sorts of situations - from tax avoidance strategies to construction project management. But on the other side, you generally don't need the huge Rolodex because the assets are purchased by another team and handed off to you to manage.
If you went institutional, you would never make the super big $, because that usually goes to acquisitions, but you wouldn't be poor and at some places, they let employees buy into the funds.

That's unfortunate. I had a CRE AM interview for a position in TX a few weeks ago. I didn't really have any idea what CRE AM was at the time (just blindly applied to hundreds of positions all over the country one weekend) and had two other interviews that week, that I was way more concerned about, so the interview didn't exactly go well. Now I know =].

As for going institutional or not. I wouldn't mind doing development at a smaller firm, making connections with contractors, and start flipping houses on the side. I hear flipping houses is a negative sum game, unless you are a contractor, or know a bunch of them that are going to hook you up. Although, I can see where this might not allowed due to conflicts of interest.

 

Two things:

  1. Get some real estate experience before you make your decision. I've been in the industry for 3-4 years and I'm still discovering new approaches and niches and property types and the only way you do that is through experience. "Development" is such a wide spread term. There are many different jobs and even more focuses under that umbrella.

  2. You don't need to be a slick salesman. In fact, most of the very successful people I know in the industry aren't. Still, pure spec development does lend itself toward a more...flamboyant personality, and real estate, especially when it comes to fundraising, is still all about who you know. You're going to have to join organizations, both real estate groups and otherwise, and most certainly network.

Commercial Real Estate Developer
 

Hi,

I have seen your response in a handful of threads and  love it.  Are you a mentor here also? I would like to ask you a few questions.

I am currently a residential real estate broker and want to make a change to Developement. Starting my MSRE at Geogrerown this Fall 2022.

 

Things are getting heated in here.

Pokemon Master - you really should look into the "type-themed gym" market. If you can navigate the zoning hurdles of say, installing a fire gym inside of an active volcano, I'm sure you'll be able to consult for gym leaders of all regions.

Commercial Real Estate Developer
 
CRE:

I feel like someone, who is usually a solid poster, is having a bad day.

I just caught up on this thread and wow. Getting pretty heated.

I second CRE's comment though. DCD is definitely one of the top RE posters on WSO. Hopefully this gets resolved because if DCD stops posting there are a bunch of people that will be a lot worse off without DCD's good insight.

Regarding leasing brokers (which I am guessing what this thread turned to be out) they can be annoying and piss people off very easily. My guess is that DCD got screwed by a broker on deal and is upset about it. Brokers do have a way of doing that to people.

 
IRRelevant:
CRE:
I feel like someone, who is usually a solid poster, is having a bad day.

I just caught up on this thread and wow. Getting pretty heated.

I second CRE's comment though. DCD is definitely one of the top RE posters on WSO. Hopefully this gets resolved because if DCD stops posting there are a bunch of people that will be a lot worse off without DCD's good insight.

Regarding leasing brokers (which I am guessing what this thread turned to be out) they can be annoying and piss people off very easily. My guess is that DCD got screwed by a broker on deal and is upset about it. Brokers do have a way of doing that to people.

I had thought this conversation was about investment sales brokers.

 
Best Response

@DCDepository your starting to sound like a middle aged asset manager that works at a boring family office and only deals with brokers on a rare occasion b/c your deal flow is so low. If you spent half as much time working on transactions as you did posting on "Wallstreet Oasis" your comments might actually be worth something. Groups that are deploying hundreds of millions annually rely on brokers b/c you can't source every single deal, if you work on a national or even regional basis, its a necessary evil and it doesn't necessarily make you "the lowest form of life." For the record, I have a brokers license that I use occasionally but I'm a developer/investor by trade.

I know several introvert/Type 'B' developers that do very well for themselves. They probably don't do as well as most of the loud mouth/dick swinging idiots that we run into, but that's simply a risk tolerance/business cycle relationship - everyone with half a brain is doing well at this point in the cycle, we'll see who is around in 2 years.

 

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